4.7 Review

Morphological, Physiological and Molecular Markers for Salt-Stressed Plants

Journal

PLANTS-BASEL
Volume 10, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/plants10020243

Keywords

salinity stress; stress tolerance; morphological markers; physiological markers; chlorophyll; antioxidant; molecular markers

Categories

Funding

  1. Faculty Development Competitive Research Grant Program (FDCRG 2020) at Nazarbayev University, Kazakhstan [240919FD3939]

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Salinity stress adversely affects plant growth and development by influencing genetic interactions and disrupting metabolic balance. Researchers are using machine learning approaches to phenotype plants and understand the impact of salt stress on plants more effectively.
Plant growth and development is adversely affected by different kind of stresses. One of the major abiotic stresses, salinity, causes complex changes in plants by influencing the interactions of genes. The modulated genetic regulation perturbs metabolic balance, which may alter plant's physiology and eventually causing yield losses. To improve agricultural output, researchers have concentrated on identification, characterization and selection of salt tolerant varieties and genotypes, although, most of these varieties are less adopted for commercial production. Nowadays, phenotyping plants through Machine learning (deep learning) approaches that analyze the images of plant leaves to predict biotic and abiotic damage on plant leaves have increased. Here, we review salinity stress related markers on molecular, physiological and morphological levels for crops such as maize, rice, ryegrass, tomato, salicornia, wheat and model plant, Arabidopsis. The combined analysis of data from stress markers on different levels together with image data are important for understanding the impact of salt stress on plants.

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